Real members. Real results.

Watch the proof.

Below are real conversations with real Fluency Formula Pro members organized by the questions you're probably asking right now.

Each video answers a specific one. Watch a couple, then decide if this is for you.

  1. Question 01

    "Can I actually speak the language, or will I just understand it?"

    Gus Nemeth, Spanish. Day three: four-hour family dinner in Mexico, cracking jokes that landed in Spanish.

    Gus came in believing he was broken at languages. French immersion in Canada plus a year and a half of Japanese with a tutor had left him barely able to choke out greetings. Then he watched Spencer have full conversations in Japanese with the same time investment and asked the obvious question: what are you doing differently?

    Day 35 with Spanish under the FF system, intermediate content started clicking. Around 300 hours in, he flew to Mexico to meet his girlfriend's family. Day one, he was shaking trying to buy a bottle of water at 7-Eleven. Day three, he sat at a four-hour family dinner with eight to twelve people who don't speak a word of English, cracking jokes that made the whole table erupt in laughter.

    Her aunt told him how kind he was. Her mom asked when he was coming back.

    Day three, I'm telling stories in Spanish and the whole table erupted in laughter. That's what I learned the language for.
    Gus Nemeth ยท Spanish
  2. Question 02

    "What does conversational fluency in 61 days actually look like?"

    Andre Santos, Pt. 1, Italian. Conversational Italian in 61 days. Married into the family.

    Andre came in skeptical. He has an academic background in neurology, so when he heard the science behind the method, he fact-checked it and the premises lined up. Within his first hour of comprehensible input he was already picking up words. By the fourth video he was predicting them. He calls those first weeks inside the method a religious experience.

    Then the payoff. Andre got married in Italy to his Italian wife, in front of her family and her high school friends, almost none of whom speak English. The wedding, the dinner, the connection all happened in Italian. None of those moments, none of those relationships happen without the language.

    Want to hear his Italian directly? Skip to 12:55 in the video above. That's Andre 61 days from absolute zero, speaking conversationally on camera.

    It was a religious experience. The grammar approach had my brain cramping inside fifteen minutes. With FF I was understanding words inside the first hour.
    Andre Santos, Pt. 1 ยท Italian
  3. Question 03

    "Was the first language a fluke? Or does the method actually work twice?"

    Andre Santos, Pt. 2, Greek. Same person, second language. The method transfers.

    And then he came back.

    The method worked so well the first time that Andre returned to run the exact same protocol on a completely different language. This time Greek, a language no traditional course bothers to fully teach. He's running the system from scratch and watching it work the second time.

    The proof isn't just that the method worked once. It's that the same method, in the same person's hands, works again for a totally different language. If you've ever wondered whether you'd be starting from zero every time you pick up a new language, this is your answer.

    If you want to learn a less mainstream language, the traditional methods don't even have a course for it. The previous program I did didn't have Greek. They told me it was "way too tiny."
    Andre Santos, Pt. 2 ยท Greek
  4. Question 04

    "I'm older. I've tried everything. Why would this be any different?"

    Chris Davies, Mandarin. Age 52. Tried every app. Came back from Beijing actually speaking Mandarin.

    Chris is 52, and he had genuinely tried every rabbit hole: tutors, apps, gadgets. He told Gus on his first call that this was his last shot at Mandarin. What changed his mind wasn't a sales pitch. It was the method speaking to his heart the moment he understood it.

    A few weeks in, he flew to Beijing for the first time. Even with basic Mandarin, he was ordering, exchanging phrases with locals, and using what he'd built. Mandarin gets called the hardest language for English speakers. He's doing it. At 52.

    I tried everything. This is my last shot. Just save your money on the apps and jump in with both feet.
    Chris Davies ยท Mandarin
  5. Question 05

    "I'm a different kind of learner. I love grammar. I'm visual. Does this still work for me?"

    Aria Ingraham, Japanese. Three minutes into a Japanese drama before realizing the subtitles never loaded.

    Aria's reason for joining is the opposite of what you'd expect. She didn't join because Fluency Formula sounded easy. She joined because nothing about it fit how she thought she learned best. Three and a half years of textbooks and grammar drills had her acing chapter tests and unable to talk about her own weekend.

    One day she fired up a Japanese drama and her translation browser extension failed to load. She watched three full minutes before realizing the subtitles never came on. Her brain had quietly absorbed it. Later, trying to describe a nail gun to her Japanese tutor, she didn't know the word, so she called it an "electric hammer." Her tutor understood instantly. They laughed and moved on.

    That's conversational fluency.

    I watched three full minutes before I realized there were no subtitles. My brain had just absorbed it.
    Aria Ingraham ยท Japanese
  6. Question 06

    "I've already done Duolingo. I've done Pimsleur. Why would this be different?"

    Arthur Ross, Spanish. Basketball coach. Tried Duolingo and Pimsleur. Now chuckling at Spanish jokes inside his first 100 hours.

    Arthur's a basketball coach. He'd tried high school Spanish, Duolingo, and Pimsleur, and walked away from all of them with a couple of phrases and a lot of wasted time. What sold him on FF was the skill-acquisition parallel: as a coach who already thinks outside the box about how the brain acquires skills, the way Spencer talks about language acquisition clicked instantly.

    His turning-point moment was small and unmistakable. He caught himself chuckling at a goofy beginner Spanish video, laughing at the actual jokes, not the awkwardness of being a beginner. Then on a visit to his daughter's college, he ordered drinks at a Mexican bar entirely in Spanish without rehearsing the sentence first.

    He's not even a hundred hours in.

    Burn the textbooks. Burn the apps. If you have an hour or more a day, you have to do comprehensible input.
    Arthur Ross ยท Spanish
  7. Question 07

    "I always burn out and quit. I can't stick with anything."

    Lotta, Korean. Burned out on grammar for two months straight. Now runs fully Korean lessons with her tutor.

    Lotta is a native German speaker acquiring Korean, and she's the testimonial for anyone who's been watching language-learning YouTube on loop instead of actually learning. Before FF, she'd burned out on grammar so hard she went two full months without studying Korean at all.

    Inside the FF system, the friction disappeared. The work became something she could pick up even on low-motivation days, because the work was just watching things she enjoyed. The same tutor who used to hear nothing but "hello" and "goodbye" from her now runs fully Korean lessons with her. She watches the same Korean kids' content native Korean kids are watching, and she understands it.

    If you join and actually put in the hours, you're going to be crazy, crazy fluent.
    Lotta ยท Korean
  8. Question 08

    "Is comprehensible input really enough on its own? It sounds too good to be true."

    Steve Myers, Brazilian Portuguese. Three months in. Consuming native Brazilian content on the first pass.

    Steve came in burned out on AI chat apps and Duolingo, specifically frustrated that none of them showed a believable path from "doing the app" to "understanding a real person speaking at real speed." What sold him on FF was the defined system: something proven, structured, and worth the time he was about to invest.

    Day one, he couldn't understand a single thing, even beginner content spoken slowly with subtitles. Fast forward a couple hundred hours and he's consuming native Brazilian content made for native speakers and understanding most of it on the first pass.

    Once you start understanding things, you're on top of the world. You want more. It's like a drug.
    Steve Myers ยท Brazilian Portuguese
  9. Question 09

    "Are these just cherry-picked stories? What about everyone else?"

    Many more members, Multiple. Wins from members across every language we coach: Russian, Polish, Hebrew, and more.

    The videos above are not the exception. They are the rule. This compilation pulls together more wins from members across every language we coach: Russian, Polish, Hebrew, French, German, and beyond. Different ages, different starting points, different languages. Same system. Same protocol. Same kind of result.

    These are not the exception. They are the rule.
    Many more members ยท Multiple

Now go run the same system they ran.

Start free inside Fluency Formula Lite. It is the same method these members used, in a community where you can ask questions, share wins, and meet people running the same protocol.